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Accounting Problems on Consignment Consignment: Problem and Solution # 1.
Raja Mills Ltd. of Ahmedabad sent 100 pieces shirting to Fancy
Stores, Delhi, on consignment basis. The consignees are entitled to
receive 5 per cent commission plus expenses. The cost to Raja Mills
Ltd. is Rs 600 per piece.
Fancy Stores, Delhi, pay the following expenses:
ADVERTISEMENTS:
Railway Freight, etc. Rs 1,000
Godown Rent and Insurance Rs 1,500
Raja Mills Ltd., draw on the consignees a draft for Rs 30,000 which
is duly accepted. It is discounted for Rs 28,650. Later Fancy Stores,
Delhi, report that the entire consignment has been sold for Rs
78,000. Show journal entries and the important ledger accounts in
the books of the consignor.
In the Books of Consignee:
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 2.
1,000 toys consigned by Roy & Co. of Calcutta to T. Nu of Rangoon
at an invoice cost of Rs 150 each. Roy & Co. paid freight Rs 10,000
and insurance Rs 1,500. During the voyage 100 toys were totally
damaged by fire and had to be thrown overboard. T. Nu took
delivery of the remaining toys and paid Rs 14,400 as customs duty.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
T. Nu sent a bank draft to Roy & Co. for Rs 50,000 as advance
payment and later sent an account sales showing that 800 toys had
been sold at Rs 220 each. Expenses incurred by T. Nu on godown
rent and advertisement, etc., amounted to Rs 2,000 T. Nu was
entitled to commission of 5 per cent. One of the credit customers
could not pay for 5 toys. Prepare the Consignment Account, T. Nu’s
account and Profit and Loss Account in the books of Roy & Co.,
assuming that nothing has been recovered from the insurers due to
a defect in the policy. T. Nu settled his account immediately.
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 3.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
The Swastik Oil Mills, Mumbai consigned 5,000 kg. of castor oil to
Dass of Kolkata on 1st January, 2012. The cost of the oil was Rs 460
per kg. The Swastik Oil Mills paid Rs 2,00,000 for packing, freight
and insurance. During transit 125 kg. were accidentally destroyed
for which the insurers paid, directly to the consignors, Rs 45,000 in
full settlement of the claim.
Dass took delivery of the consignment on the 10th January. On 31st
March, 2012 Dass reported that 3,750 kg. were sold at Rs 600, the
expenses being on godown rent Rs 30,000, on advertisement Rs
40,000 and on salesmen’s salaries Rs 64,000. Dass is entitled to a
commission of 3 per cent plus 1½ per cent del credere. A party
which had bought 500 kg. was able to pay only 80% of the amount
due from it.
Dass reported a loss of 50 kg, due to leakage. Assuming that Dass
paid the amount due by bank draft, show the accounts in the books
of both the parties. Books of accounts are closed by the parties on
31st March.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 4.
H. Ltd. forwarded on 1st December, 2011, 50 pressure cookers to
Kale of Mumbai to be sold on behalf of H. Ltd. The cost of one
pressure cooker was Rs 1,200 but the invoice price was Rs 1,600. H.
Ltd. incurred Rs 2,000 on freight and insurance. Kale received the
consignment on 14th December, 2011 and accepted a 3 months’
draft drawn upon him by H. Ltd. for Rs 40,000. Kale paid Rs 1,050
as rent and Rs 250 as insurance and by 31st March had disposed of
40 pressure cookers at Rs 1,640 each. Kale is entitled to a
commission of 5 per cent on sales including a del credere
commission of 1%. Kale sold 10 pressure cookers son credit and was
not able to recover sale proceeds of one pressure cooker because of
insolvency of the debtor.
You are required to:
(i) Prepare all the ledger accounts in the books of H Ltd; and
(ii) Pass journal entries for all the transactions relating of
consignment.
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 5.
Punjab Cycle Co. of Ludhiana consigned 100 tricycles to Kanpur
Cycle Co. of Kanpur costing Rs 1,500 each, invoiced at Rs 2,000
each. The consignor paid freight Rs 10,000 and insurance in transit
Rs 1,500. During transit, 10 tricycles were totally damaged.
Kanpur Cycle Co. took delivery of remaining tricycles and paid Rs
1,530 for octroi duty. Kanpur Cycle Co. sent a bank draft to Punjab
Cycle Co. for Rs 50,000 as advance and later on sent an account
sales showing that 80 tricycles had been sold @ Rs 2,200 each.
Expenses incurred by Kanpur Cycle Co. on godown rent were Rs
2,000. Kanpur Cycle Co. is entitled to a commission of 5% on
invoice price and 25% on any surplus of sale price over invoice
price. Insurance claim was settled at Rs 14,000.
Prepare consignment account, consignee’s account and accidental
loss account in the books of the consignor.
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 6.
A Co. Ltd., manufacturers and dealers in edible oil, consigned to
their Bangalore agent, 250 crates of oil (each crate containing 12
one-kilo sachets) in March, 2012. The consignment was sent at 20%
over the cost price of Rs 120 per kilo. A bill was drawn on the agent
for 80% of the value of the consignment which was met on
presentation. Expenses incurred by the company by way of freight
and insurance came to Rs 12,000.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
The agent received the consignment by lorry and sold in March
2012, 225 crates @ Rs 180 per kilo. He found that 125 sachets had
got damaged in transit—the manufacturer accepted this as a normal
loss— and these were sold to consumers at Rs 80 per sachet. The
insurance company settled the loss claim for Rs 2,500.
Agent incurred expenses of Rs 5,000 on his own account
(unconnected with the liability under the agreement) and Rs 3,000
on consignor’s account. He is entitled to a commission of 5% on
sales effected. By 15th April, 2012, the agent remitted the balance
due to him to the company.
Draw the accounts in the book of A Co. Ltd., to record the above
transactions.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 7.
On 31st March, 2012 Ramji Dayalji P. Ltd., a trading organisation
owned inventory costing Rs 3 lakhs of which inventory valued Rs 1
lakh was with consignees. It also had in its possession inventory
valued at Rs 10 lakhs belonging to its own principals.
During the year ended 31st March, 2012 Ramji Dayalji P.
Ltd.:
(a) Purchased inventory worth Rs 50 lakhs of which 80% was
despatched to its consignees, the transportation cost being 5% of
the value of goods sent;
(b) Received from its principals inventory of Rs 150 lakhs;
(c) Sold 90% of own goods received and lying with itself at 20%
margin on sales;
(d) Sold on behalf of principals 95% of goods available at 120% of
the value thereof. Ramji Dayalji P. Ltd. is entitled to commission at
10% of such sales.
The consignees sold at 125% of their per unit landed cost
(consignees spending nil) 95% of goods available with them and
were entitled to commission at 10% of sales.
You are asked to work out the various figures for recording in the
revenue statement of Ramji Dayalji P. Ltd. for the year ended 31st
March, 2012. Prepare the revenue statement.
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 8.
The Kochi Consignment Account in the books of Remi of Kottayam
showed a debit balance of Rs 1,500 representing the cost of 10
pieces of fancy goods on 1st April, 2011. The invoice value of each
piece was Rs 175. On 1st May, 2011 Ranaji sent a further
consignment to Cochin of 40 pieces, costing Rs 160 each, invoiced
proforma at Rs 180 each. The freight and other charges amounted
to Rs 210.
On 21st March, 2012, the Kochi Agent sent an Account Sales
showing that 8 pieces from the old stock realised Rs 140 each and
25 pieces from the second consignment realised Rs 200 each and 15
pieces remained in stock unsold. Two pieces from the old stock,
being unsaleable at Kochi, were returned to Mumbai, for which the
Kochi Agent sent a separate debit note for Rs 30, being expenses
incurred by him as packing and freight.
The Kochi Agent is entitled to a selling commission of 10 per cent
which covers all our-of-pocket expenses in respect of the
consignment Show the necessary account in the books of the
consignor, supposing that he closes his accounts on 31st March.
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 9.
In the Sales Ledger of Disposal Goods Co., the following
account appears:
Upon inquiry, you find that the debit to Sunderam of Rs 12,000
represented goods costing Rs 10,000 delivered to him on the
understanding that he will try to dispose of them in his own market,
or others-wise return them. For his services, he is to be allowed a
commission of 10 per cent on all sales effected, out of which he is to
defray expenses that he may incur.
On 31st March, 2012, when Disposal Goods Co. make up their
annual accounts, it transpires that Sunderam has sold half the
goods at the prices at which they were invoiced to him, but is
doubtful about his ability to dispose of the remainder. He, therefore,
proposes to offer his customers a special trade discount of 20 per
cent and to waive any further sales commission. To this Disposal
Goods Co. agreed. Sunderam was not able to recover Rs 200 of sales
ex-consignment.
(1) Show the necessary corrective entries in the firm’s journal.
(2) Set out Sunderam’s account as it will appear when the journal
entries have been posted, and
(3) State clearly the resultant profit or loss on the matter.
Solution:
It is obvious that the relationship between Disposal Goods Co. and
Sunderam is that of principal and agent. Hence, Sunderam should
not have been debited with the goods sent to him, nor is the debit
regarding expenses proper.
If the accounts had been prepared properly, they would
have appeared as follows:
Consignment: Problem and Solution # 10.
C. Ltd. of Mumbai consigned 100 diesel engines to Zahir of
Dacca on 1st April, 2011 on the following terms:
(i) Zahir to get 12½ % commission of the sale price up to Rs 12,500
per engine; for engines sold at above this price, Zahir was to share
the profit equally with C. Ltd.—for the purpose the Bangladesh Taka
was to be considered as worth 90 paise.
(ii) Zahir was to meet all expenses after the engines reached Dacca
and was to guarantee all debts.
(iii) C. Ltd. was to guarantee trouble-free performance for one
year—any expenses in this regard borne by Zahir were to be
immediately reimbursed to him. Further, C. Ltd. was to post an
engineer at Dacca for the purpose.
The cost of each diesel engine to C. Ltd. was Rs 9,000; C. Ltd., paid
Rs 1,000 on freight per engine and packing and 1% ECGC
Commission (on the basis of Rs 12,500 per engine) which covered
75% of the loss that may arise because of the failure of the foreign
buyer/agent to remit the amount due.
C. Ltd. considered Rs 1,000 as a fair estimate for maintenance
during the warranty period—Rs 400 for the first six months and Rs
600 for remaining period.
Zahir reported a sale of 80 engines (average date 1st Oct. 2011). Of
these, 50 had been sold at Taka 15,000 and 30 Taka 13,000; of the
latter he had not been able to recover the amount in respect of 10
engines, he had spent Taka 35,000 on maintenance for which
reimbursement had been made by C. Ltd. when the Taka was worth
87 paise. Zahir had remitted Taka 10,00,000 when the value was 88
paise. The monthly cost of the engineer posted at Dacca was Rs
4,000 starting from 1st November, 2011.
Prepare the engineer Account in the Books of C. Ltd., reconing
exchange loss or profit separately on the basis of 90 paise to a Taka.